PAGE FOUR THP GUARDIAN. Authorized :3 Second I..'l:se Mail Post office Department, Ottawa. 11,. i.i..,.i t,-...,.i..., i-..i.i..i.i..,, cu. whose name is associated with this trans- orm' lion. rruiilcnt and A::m:Inte Editor. inn A Burnett. f d Alnocilie Editor. Frilllli Walker. and lives purchased such wealth, who would CIRCIJLATION t . .- .. .. l , Lower: Prince Ldnard island like the dew the price of universal abh0l,l,enCe.lI And from Gibbon these gems: ”As the lhallowed inspirer of all enlightenment and f'lhe Strongest Memory is rtleaker llrou the Weakest Ink". instruction, he caused the archives of uti- iversal history and the postulates of science and art to be falsified by fabrications which disclaimed the maxims of reason and ren- , dercd powerless the vital principles of hu- For the past eight months Canadian man-ttt.' i.ii.tti(, and i.0i.aCit)..n service personnel bound for horca have had” I-Stalin that Country and "5 people Cxplamed mi governed by names; nor was he deceived them in a little booklet ”l(orea", published in his Oxpcctatioii that the people would IIONIIAV. .liK'i.Y7 I I. cii'rTiiTi1'Tr?:r I l Iidioduction To Korea at the request of the Chief of General Sutmi-it to Siai.t,i,i.t pi.0i,idCd that they went Slam C”"”d”"' AH"-l" by H” R”m"” "I respectfully assured that they still enjoyed Current Affairs. I the-ii, ti.ee('tOmvv The Folimvnm h-V N"”””"ll h"f"'W"r Apparently because it was difficult to Minister Claxton explains to the Canadian Sustain the adopted style for anytlength, soldier that the intention is to let him know the titiovc entries taiicd to qualify for mon. something of the liistoi”.:'ai and cultural t,tai,t, i.t,ti.ai.dSi it atso appears tmtikeiyt background of the liorean people whosct note; an exctiaiiget that they win qualify peace and security were llll'CaiC”odt am for Stalin prizes by reason of their fidelity that the object of the lforcan cainpaign to titithi is to show that ay;;:,rcssioii will be resisted g7 and therefore will provide no easy way of I . conquering nations one by one. i tD"0R'AL NU. E3 The booklet goes into the geograplnut population and climate of that country, so like and yet so unlike our own land. Sold- iers are told that it's even more different than it looks. Sons don't shake hands with their fathers, nor smoke in their compairvl 0 ' ' at any 319. it's the land of the f0rtuIlc- Alllollitj the little-known casualties of teller. With intricate formulae based one vvoi-id vvap 11 won, the race course and year, month, week and day he will pi'e-ici-ich-Ct fields at Gib,-aitai-, The British diet the most auspicious circumstances for eliminated them to make way for a modern Rnylhillg fI'0ll1 8 Ill?lI'Fl3f10 10 ill? i-II'c”W0- airfield. says the National Geographic So- The Canadian S0lTi(Y(llllElll.S eves are t.it.ti.t opened to the long and unified history of - - 0 the Koreans (divided 11110 "X01111" midi The storming of the Bastille this date The foot-and-mouth disease threat is re- ported to be at an end. but it will be a while before Canadian farmers or Amer- icans get over the accompanying jitters. s u d tdttl "tf t"l ith T H in (1 U A R D I A N 1 iii? ”g.-.?. 3522.: .E”3.?LZiJZiZ?..g ttraveller from Muscovy to Sakhalien may 0 be counted sufficient memorial to the marit Yet there is probably notlone of the myriad humble peasants, whose blood was sensible that mankind iS days Day after day the lives of PUBLIC FORUM This column I: open to the diwuuion by corrupondcnt: of question: of lnterelt. The Guardian doc: not neccnnr ily endorse the opinion of t uul re:pondent.:. not count the fame of Stalin too dear ati Liquon 3-mQ.;'gvngNoUNc;.;p i Sir,-I have been reading the letters in your paper concerning the liquor store at. Borden. I agree with Mr. Simpson; this thing isliould stir the soul of every man and woman of our Island. A: stat- - ed in at letter concerning "road sign and marks", I am sure that iive need these. I am likewise positive that we do not need any tmoie stores or shops to sell the: very thing that is degrading and l damning our men and women to- our people are in grave danger as they walk or drive our highways; especially so. when It person I5 under the influence of liquor, as some people are doing their best to lift. humanity up from sin to A level where they will be respect.- able, God-fearing people. On the. other hand, another "liquor store" means that. we are another step farther away from the original plan "to serve God” and that. much nearer the brink of eternal woe and the Judgments of God. I am, sir. et.c.. REV. W. C. WILCOX. Elmsdalc, P.E.I. t 9&0 Old Charlottetown (And 2. I. I. ) i l TEiVANTS' LEASES i From ll letter from the Execu- tive Council of Prince Edward Is- land to the Rt. Hon. Earl Kimb- criey, Secretary of State for the Colonies, setting forth the reasons for introducing the Tenants' Coni- pensation Act, 1871: "The great majority of lease: granted in this Island are for the term of 999 years, and are not in- terfered with by any of the pro- visions of this hill. The griev- ances intended to he redressed are those where lands have been grained to tenants on lease for short terms, taken in many in- stances by emigrants either prev- many of .t.he drivers of today are. , this trailer house against a concrete (ZflARLO'1”llEfl:GltVVN - The Neighbors it -I Y . K . i ii it it if "So nice you're near enough '5 cm to 1 was afraid Bobby wouldn't have anybody to fight with.” By George Clerk .4 us ff t It I r.. on Fgrnlhi. "N, by New lyndkull Q In to drive over with your boy. T f. Notes 73); An intoxicated driver wrecked wall-showing you another way drink can break up a home.-Strain ford Beacon-Herald. Areas of Asia and Africa that were once highly fertile and sup- ported great populations are today brown and parched and little bet.- ter than deserts. They have lost their soil. Canada is in a happier position. She started her soil dc- pletion later in the day. But. she is hard at it,Innd the result is inevitable unless she changes her ways. - tljancouver Province; . 11': watermelon time. In regions aye, .T.he Waxf. The little girl who said "lions are mean" had every reason to say so, because she was the one who was mauled by a lioness at the Lethbrldge exhibition. Lions certainly are mean, little girl, and we don't blame you a bit for say- ing so. However, we don't. blame the lions, either, if you under- stand what we mean. No wonder lions are mean! Who wouldn't feel the same way they do if they were taken from their natural habitat and cooped up in a cage for the rest of their lives? Humans wouldn't. like it, so why should animals who are used to roaming the fields and the mountains of their homeland without a care In The bngpipe, a johnny-comc- Scottish as plaids and kllta for II' that, " That the national musical in- strument of Scotland is far older than its Scottish tics seems well established,says the National Geo- graphic Socicty. It is regarded as Asiatic in origin and counted among the most. ancient of music- makers. Brnving the wrath of his coun- trymen, the Glasgow scholar places the arrival of the bagpipe in Scotland as late as the 16th cen- tury and finds it. came from Italy. There is evidence, however. that bagpipes were brought to the British Isles by Roman legion- naircs. to whom the instrument was well known. Nero was re- ported to be an accomplished per- former cn one type of bngpipc. The pipes were popular with trou- badoure of the Middle Ages. . . . The Scottish people have taken the bagpipe as their own. No Highland or Lowland festival or party is complete without pipe music, and Scottish military bug- pipe bands are as famous as the noted regiments to which they belong. Much of fthe music written for the bagplpe is Scottish. There are three types of such music. The Ceol- Bug, or Little Music. con- sists of dance and march tunes; the Ceol Meadonach, or Middle Music, includes slow marches, re- treats, and simple laments: and finally, the majestic Ceol Mor, or Big Music, embraces the great sonata: or concerto: of bagpipe composition. There are about. 300 laments, battle hymns, and salutes that can be classified as Big Music. They are not for the amateur performer or listener. The Big Music is considered by experts to be truly great national music. It consists of certain melodic lines repeated and varied with chang- ing groupings .of.rh.ythm. The most: famous of all High- land musicians, the Maccrimmons. (National Geographic New: lately to Scotland according to a current Glasgow researcher, is as tight. Bagpipes Are Scottish Regardless Of Origin Bulletin) The bagplpe is ll complex rent instrument consisting of an air- ienther bag having from three to five apertures to which are affixed the tubes or pipes, 1., the Highland bagpipe the bag ii, filled with air by means of it ”blow pipe" tlirougli which iii, piper blows air into the l'('5eI'Vo1i In other types the bag is filled by 9. bellows. t The other attached pipes con. stat of one or more ”drones" or tubes, each capable of only om note.'The drones supply the cm, slant background notes for tip. varied music produced by the re; miiining tube, the "chanter" Oi. melody pipe, on which the pipe,- produces the medoly by fingering, Constant pressure of airthrougli the drones and chnntcr is main. tinned by arm pressure on the bi;-. ijvhicli is carried under the ehouif er. SOLITl'DE How still it is here in the woods. The trees 'St:nd motionless, as if they did not dare To stir, lest it, should break iii!) spell. The nir Hangs quiet as spaces in a llItIl'l):L' frieze, Even this little brook, that runs at ease, Whispering and gurgling with it: curling thread Of sound, the shadowy siin-pici-t-i-ii silences. Sometimes a hawk screams or a Woodpecker Startles the stillness from it: fixed mood With his loud careless tap, Sometimes I hern- The .dreamy white-throat from some far off tree Pipe slowly on the listening sol- Itude. JiiLY 1.4. 1952 i H ' v' ' .' . i .South only by the dlVlSl0ll of American i1789 was the commencement of the French ioiisiy hit or immedimiy him. where the huge green meims are E the woiidi we mi sum, tot, the hereditary pipe” to the Mumods M15513" 7-WW5 0! ”CCUi'l3il0” 05 1945l- H0Ttcvolution. The mob completely destroyed ihm "lvrim '" "iii Colony. he- commoner crap they are the tar' nime imi who Wis miluledi but we M Dunvegan on the 151:1 of Skm ms me purl” , , , , V, i ,, . A j V, t . ore they were acquainted with , ' ,- X150 99 sorry or ie ioncss,- wrote, taught. nnd playc tlu-Ceol pensive y. hams among mi”?-l mhm Hunes Hui n20' ililfl (lid Slam P1150” (md Citadel of pm” the difficulties and hardships con- tgiftLei?tfioiinsmllTi-itila)inoiwgileeiiarififdidilii membndge Hel'3Id'- Mor. scorning the simpler form: -Ari-liibalrt Laiiipiuu 000.000 K01'9al15 1W9-d 50Um "I ill? -)3”liwhich had been used for the confinement nected with clearing Wilderness the gist, nit: business. in mi the F H t I of conipositionl Parallel and 8000-000 W01 of it 1” 194-lint political prisoners. i?.'l?5';5.I'.?iiJZ.””dl"g hm" M A""”””” ””””f ” 0397-000 .iiiS3"iuin"iIi5”Tn .”.'.i.?ii i'Z.'Eci."'Ji ofD?h1:kiutFa2ntiM?i'SgiIeI:tnogf ”i.'ii but that since then a further 5,700,000 have: "Coming from the Mother Coun- l””.""”"'”g”f)i Vaiued.” ”0'"t7i”imi 50V?!" Com-E One is dated 1934. line, composed the prophetic la- fled into the already ovcrsitonulatcd south ' "Y '09-” 1001"” W0" 193505 W This pm 5 y was” New” or cam” W” ""915 l"Ve5' The ma” ”M30C”mm0” Nev" Wm I 0 0 ' it-hen gcameii meteorologists and Ocean, terms of from twenty to forty mo" gxponed m C3”ad3- m" ml "OX3. dfil-Ed 19j14. has E "V" (DTP Return" before he followed Bon-i l t ' , years as a great: harm. They, how- those mcgan-V obtained and Com Sumably I" 1”” 55 we” 35 101” nie Prince Charlie in the tragic ographers from a number of countries meet it-er, round by hitter expe,ic,,c,,,sumed by i(r):aI't105a11l1n1Sii10iiiiIi iiiprgigt” 1VlCl0;”yJThan(iml:'0hsmall bmaple campaign at 1745 and died in thel l. . . i that it in t t t , , owner. - ornw n aix- - cave . e r 5 ows a eaver, R t 1 Mo, pgm-ink Mar Mac. In 0 01' y years VAHS Oil 0 3' tin London on July 14 to discuss and A set at invest The fourth Crtmmon had good reason W only long enough to enable them hold"- shows a beaver. and a set. of composing the touching ”Lnmgnt, notes succeeding NORII-(AMERICAN LIFE L. S. STEVENSON BRANCH MANAGER ' l The Marshall Plan tional cooperation in marine meteorology, it, near away the West. emt ..,. t. Mr. K. T. McLeod, of the Canadian Meteor- iological Service, will represent Canada. 0 The Marshall Plan came to an end 0 ficially on Julie 30 after four years and three months' operation, without achieving t , Canada is represented at an lnternatioii- its object of rebuilding Europe's war-torn i . val Seaweed Symposium which opens today economy. This failure means that the. Brit-, i t i , , , , ish. French. Italians and our other allies 5” Edlllburilh L””'0"5”-Vi Topics 00108 dis" d include pychology. algal chemistry, in western Europe are still not able to bal- "U559 i , t , , , lharvcsting technology, utilization in in- ance their trade with North America anrii t t A d t id yet maintain it tcwiiiah Standard of tit-im:tdLlSil')', medicine and agiicultuic, an woi seawccrl resources. and a military standard of defence sufficient to hold off the internal and external thrcati - - - of Communism. This imbalance of trans-i 1.-imince Miiiistci. Atihott has i.ei.eaied atlantic. trade diminished appreciably justithat t.-edcmt indirect taxes amount to an" ihe Outbwak M me Korea" warwinoite than one and one-half times the di- whe” N0"ht1;t31nC1'iiCa W135 billlinlz e”0im0Lisii'ect income and estate taxes. In this day, quammes '7 mi” 0” Oma 1'0" ma CV33 however income Tax itself is in the nature for war stockpiling, and thereby pourinczlot inditeyct taxation tot. it is coitected tmm dollars mm m” 5i”li”g 90”" the employer who must recoup from the The problem has become much more wa:,(,it..di,iit,i.. serious again. Still, the Plan has not fail- - u - ”d complcm-V' It ha” helped H" E”1'0pm”i Panelling and furniture in English oak countries a long way along the road back iimt, been Shipped to New York as Brit; even though it. has not achieved its full pur- atnus git-t to the pCi.mtiheiit tiCadqtiai.tei.S Do” In mm H is "mnnlwd that 3” aniiof llnited Nations. The furniture includes nual "investment" of four billion dollars of tabim int. 34 delegates. titted with ioud. Marsha" Aid m HMS and "mm in mm 1'0" speakers and for simultaneous interpreta- sultcd in a jump of Sill! billion in Wcstcwi hon: ttt.,t(,Latt,s- ai,mChaii.S and 25; Chairs foi- Eui'opc's annual production. USP iii, ti", iihtitit. and i,i.i,i..st Canada has indirectly been one of the i greatest beneficiaries of the Nlarshall Plan, A total of si,29s,ooo,onn in Marshall aid Some to huge iCCl)Cl';';'S were sighted dollars was spent by P.'uropean recipients I”?! llmlk l” ill" Simil Oi Belle Isle. Tile on Canadian goods which they could not d”n' of 1701” ice has 1017i! 1700" 1'l01Cd by otherwise have afforded to buy. Piritain Al'Cl'0 0NP101'f3l'S. SilyS U10 National Geo- alonc spent S99i.tJ20,0()t) here up to the m'ai"h'C S0Cl9'.V- A"0X'c1mD1C (filed by Conl- md of iast yctiit This was 38 pm. mitt at mandcr Donald B. MacMillan concerns a her total allocation of Marshall aid, and pa” "I W"i5- Commander M3CMiii8n says the rest She spent in the tit gt tthat friend left his pants on the ice off The cessation of Marshall aid, and iisiSlbC”a in 1881 and lh0.V W-""0 f0Uf1d Ell replacement by the U. S. Mutual Securityicapp F"”'""”v Gfeeniandv in 1334- Aid with its emphasis switching from con i , H . . . i sumer goods to military equipment, mcansi C'V”'7i0d mimv who relishes Crab-S 0ySe that our exporters, especially of wheat, nowt lo"-9 5”("”i5v and ”085' 1025. SCOFUS insects face a serious threat to their markets int” food Yet Hmtemois 00"5ld'3T 5 i0CU5t western Europa tilllagiic as nl:ill”la.fF0n1illeaVCl'l.f Australiait ) s men ea various ypes o raw insec larvlae. American Indians enjoyed roasted cric cts. as well as the queens of leaf-cut- ting ants. And to the Aztecs an ear of corn tasted best if full of borers, says the t The London Spectator I recently in-i National Geographic Society. i vited its i readers to submit character- 9 0 0 sketches of Stalin drawn from the follow-i I-lenry Borden, Q.C.,' president of Brazil- ing imaginary works: Carlyle's "Russian Ian Traction (3 Canadian company that em. Revolution”, ”Gibbon's "Decline and Fall of plays 45,000 people in B;-azii) made it wise the Russian Iimpirc" and Macaulay's "Essay observation in a speech last month, says on Communism. A few samples follow: the Printed Word. It is that an immigra- Fmm Carlyle: "Lenin-i0y8i. Kremlin- tlon policy of easy access might not let into hungry. the P909155 friend is no Puritan Canada more undesirables than will get in Whit mailers though Clafist C0l'DS0S lUm- under a,highly restrictive policy, while 5'9 l0W8Td3 his b00lS implacable? He Pulls many of: honest intent who would mdke "Om his Pocket not 3 T9V01V91' but 3 Pipe; good citizens may be kept out. .',l'he red fills it, spits; whither? Into the Infinite; tape involved in the passport regulations, ""3 "OW 5m0k9'hBPPy .85 the Everlasting for instance, does not, apparently, prevent Bonfire. he SW93 an EV9Ti8-W"! Puff-" forgery of passports or the irregular ob- From Macaulay: "The many edifices mining of visa; 0 0 or llovel contest suitable homesicads, and bring their farms into a slate of cultiva- tion sufficient to afford for them- selves and their families 8 coni- fortable subsistence. "The tenant after having spent the best year: of his life in giving a real value to the property, in his old age finds the result of many years of labour and foil pass into the hands of his land- lord, who rclcts the said property with its improvements, at a high rate to a stranger, and thereby ,rcnps a large profit from the un- rcmuncraicrl labour and industry of the unfortunate tenant. i "The rents reserved in the leases for short terms are quite as high, anti, in many instances. higher than those reserved in leases for terms of 999 years. There is no nnaioizy between the position of a tenant in the Mother Country holding a cultivated farm under a short lease, and that of a tenant in this Island who takes a short lease of a wilderness farm and is obliged to clear away the lforesi before he can grow either ta blade of grass or an ear of corn tfnr thr: support of himself anti his family. "Tenants for short terms of years in this Island are not en- titled in the privilege of purchas- ing the fret-holds of their farms frnni their landlords under the provisions of the Fifteen Years Purchase Act. whilst many tenants ifor long terms of years enjoy this privilege. i "The Hill Whirl! is the subject- imaltcr of this minute is the only rcmctiy which the Government of ilhis Colony have been ahlp to de- visc as an equitable adjustment of the difficulties and hardships under which tenants for short lcrnis of years are new labour- ing." Eciiaesvoi-i930's In Farm Prices (Windsor star) , Those who heard the debate on agriculture in the Commons Thurs- day must have had memories of the great depression of the two's when the bottom fell out. of farm prices. Members cited instances of farmers receiving at present as lit.- tle ll 18 cents per dozen for eggs and a net of 21 cents for n 38- pound hide, 0 -During the depression eggs were selling for in few cents per dozen. and some caltleehipped from the foothills to Winnipeg scarcely paid the freight and commlulon coats. Low prices for farm product: then. and the inability of former: tan purchue manufactured goodl, deepened and prolonged the de- pression. None wnnta I repetition of those condltlonl. There in no depression now. of course. But there I: something wrong if in farmer get: a net. of only 21 cents for : hide. prices of leather goods belngwhst they are. Mr. Robert. Fair. Social Credit, Battle River. produced I cheque for flit: amount. Likewise there In Iomething wrong if I farmer nnywhue in Oancd: hub to accept 18 cents I down for eggs, I: nlleged by Mr. John Blnnott. LIb., Springfield. or If the farmer get: leu than half the retail price for eggs. as cl:im- ed by Mr. L E. cnrdlff, com., Huron North. such prices us put in perspect- ive If one compares them with the The Governor General of Can- ada. drew an admirable lesson frotn Confederation Day when he advised his Canadian felluw-cltiz- ens to "keep to their own chii.rac- ter to fulfil the role assigned them in this new Elizabethan era." Mr. Massey emphasized that a host of little things contribute through our national life to con- stitute our national character. We ought to realize that, he said, and to take hold of the task that is ours within confederation which still remains a "great. art. of faith," of men endowed with a great. foresight."--tLc Solcil, Que- beet. i MTFK is provided in many schools withoul. cost, or at a reducedi price, so that. dietary deficiencies in pupils may be corrected. The idea is good but one defect. is that all children don't like milk. In such cases, nothing is added to thee caloric intake. It appears. though, that even the closest. screenings and finest. calculations of science rarely turn up R child who doesn't. like ice cream. In fact, it might not. be going too far to say most. like It better than milk. If this looks like the germ of an idea to school boards, let's credit for off Tasmania with linv- ing found it. first. Down there the minister of health is proposing free ice crcmfi instead of free milk.-twindsor Start. machinery or other essentials of production, Ml'. P. E. Wright, G. C. F,, Mclfort. says fertilizer now costs sl06 21. ton. as against 519 shortly before World War II. That is why Mr. sinnott urged an in- veatigatiun into farm machinery prices and Mr. Wright one into the fertilizer industry. None suggests such examples are leaves. The fourth shows the tall chimneys of a nickel plant. Vis- for the Children" when seven of itors must. wonder why we do not. settle upon a design for the five- cent. piece and keep to it, as we do in our other coins.-(Ottawa Journali. This party who grew up In Fort. William swears one can bring it partridge home without shooting it first. ttlnstead of a gun, you use it long light pole," he said. "When you get. near a partridge, you move the pole up and down. This has sort of a hypnotic influ- ence on the biid. He starts mov- ing his head up and down, keep- ing time with the pole. Once you have the partidge moving his head, you keep moving closer to him as you keep the pole going up and down. Finally, when you ate quite close to the bird. you brin-,1 the pole down sharply on his head.” Maybe it. works. We wouldn't. know.- (Fort. William Tinies-Journal). Defence, :nd stockpiling. And sinews' of war, mean different. things in different places. Take France, for example. Over there two bumper grape harvests have all but. deluged t.he vlntners. The market, according to a Paris re- port, is glutted. And what. idea has that put: into the head of R French senator. Simply that this flood of grape juice should be used to create "a. security stock- pile of wine for the European army." Another politico has ob- served that ”with such a stockpile even England might be induced to take part in the European com- munity." He has the wrong no- tion. Not. wine but ale. or beer, or 'iirf air 'arf, is needed for that. How is France's crop of hops and barley? How sinewy is its beer stockplle That. is the basic issue. Voila. - (Windsor Star). typical of farm prices. The food- and-mouth disease, resulting in surpluses. knocked prices But. most: farmers still can operate at B profit, even though I1 reduced one. High processing and distributing costs are, of course. the key to the differential between what. the farmer receives for his produce and what the consumer pays for it. Early in the year, Mr. J. William Horsey, president. of the Dominion Stores, Limited. said the producer gets only 41 percent. on the aver- age. of the consumerr dollar. The other hi! cents goes somewhere be- tween he farm and the shoppers buket. He termed this a great. challenge. saying that while productl-m costs have been lowered. distribution costs continue to soar. lie offered: 52,000 prize for the beat. essay of- fcring a solution to this dilemma, He recog ' -' the seriousness of it. During the past. decade the value of farm machine ,7 more ' than tripled, from 3600,t!)0,000 to A2,- ooo.ooo.ooo. Certainly this is evid- ence fumer: generally have been pi-oeperoul. with money to buy. But it :lno is evidence of the heavy in- vutment. they must carry-and th:t they can't carry it on the bulb of egg: It In cant: I dozen end 21 cent: for I hide. Consumer: want. reasonably pric- ed food. But they should not want. it so cheap as to knock farmers out. of the market for manufactur- ed goodl. That route tends to un- employment. And they should also expect. farmer: to get it fair share price: farmers have to any for of cunaumerr dollars. down. i has One of the first Innovations of the reign of Queen Elizabeth II become known, and those wcmcn who may be described as diplomatic wives are going to like it. Two envoys, about to make their first call on her Majesty to present their credentials, have been invited to bring their wives. This presumably will become a custom. To the diplomatic has been added A friendly, personal touch previous- ly submerged in that thlnff called "official procedure." The two ,cn- Vuys whose wives will share in the setting of this precedent. are not frcm powerful states, but from rei- aiively weak ones-viet. Nam (In- do-China) and Ecuador- which makes the gesture all the more democratic. From an outspoken champion of the home and family life, this innovation by Her Mn- lesly is not surprising. More hap- py gestures of a similar nature may be expected as her reign con- tinues.-Iwtndsor star. The Ago-Old Story aKm(Ofe0OsCeOOO4O-mvvx Thun nlth the Lord. the Holy one of I:reel, and hi: Maker. Anti my Ienl, end concerning the work of my hind: commend yo me. 1 have made the earth. and created men upon It: I. even In hondl, have ucretchcd out the lienvann. mended me of thing: to come concerning and III their host. ll(lV0 1 cont- hls eight sons died in the space of Hui-DROFESSIONAL CARDSM BYIIOII OJ. onto 0. o. M. Albon Former, ox: PTOMETRIST 5,5,, LL13, 128 Rem street Bnrrlster and Solicitor PHONE "9 Bunk of Comme Lu Building Opposite Revere Hotel Charlottetown Money to Lnnn Bell, Mathieson K: Foster Barristers, Solicitors. etc. R. R. BELL. QC. D. L. MATHIESON, LL,l3.. Q.C G. IL FOSTER. LLB. Loan: on City and Farm Properties 150 Richmond Street Charlottetown. P.E.l. TnEEEiET.T.7iFcE o.c. Barrister. Solicitor. Notary Royal Bank of Canada Building Charlottetown. P B I. LOANS ON CITY AND FARM PROPERTIES Palmer 8: Hesiom A. I. HASLAM. B.A. Ll.B. B:rrI:ter. Etc. Bnnh of Nov: Scotin (lumber! Charlottetown, P F. l. MONEY I'D LOAN Geode! & Hoszord GILBERT A. GAUDI-IT. B A., LL ll Barrister: end Soilcllo - Money to Loon llldilll Innis of Conuneri-e Bldg ..........-.--- . . J. A. McGuiqurI. Chas. R. McQuoid BARIIISTI-ZR, sni.icI'ron. cu B.A. NOTARY ETC. BAIUIISTER, soLicrrufL BABRISTER. SULICITOB NOTARY. Ete.. I Eulern Trust Building CURRIB NJ"-"'55 CHARL()'l'1'E'l'0WN Phone l'IlI ..m...........-.,- MocPhee Iii Iroinor H. F. Dlncl'HEE. B.A.. QC. J. S. TIIVIIIR Optometrist Eye: examined, glance fitted Corner Kent and Queen 51!. Olflce Phone 1958-House lillli Q IOMEIILED 'I'BAiN0lL B A. Berrlnere. us. A. Wolthen .GoudeI. LL. 8. B&lBlS'l'ER, SOLIUITOR. Eta. J. A. CARR! iTl-IEKS Plllllllil Building R 0 ill Gnftnn um: i ' Money to Loan Collection OPTOMETRBT PHONE 2372 MArmssoN.' PEAKE at m...l33s'i.?.'ii..?-I'”.:l.ma NICHOLSON A. w. MATHESDN. no A. R. PEAKE. Il.An LLIL JOHN P. NlUH0l.BfIN. LLJL Dr. W. R. Carson Chlropnctnr B"""u""" S" P:Imer Graduate Collection: - Money In Inge g"AnLo1-T31-own to Great George Street "mm ttt-,1 201 print” at. Chnrloltelnvm Allison M. Gillls. LLB. numlb-rr.n. imucrron. in Dr. A. L. Muclsnuc ' DENTIST Denul X-Rey GLORIA BUILDING I'll Grefton St. Phone 251 0- , I80 Richmond 51. - Clflon-Iv Phone H00 lI.li. Ilillili and GOMPMIY UHABTIJICED ACCOUNTANTS Ill Grclt. 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